Midwestern Musings

In a tribute to those musicians and storytellers, both current and nearly forgotten, I’ll provide a folk music lyric to begin my musings.

Tuesday, May 02, 2006

Do I Ever Cross Your Mind?

“And when I think of you and the love we once knew,
How I wish we could go back in time.
Do you ever think back on old memories like that,
Or do I ever cross your mind?”



I’ve moved on. At least physically. I’m in a different state, a new home, and pretty much a new life. On paper, this life is much more successful: more money, more prestige, a better chance for advancement. I still miss the old one a little. I’m a little scrooge-esque, being haunted by snippets of Christmas past, only it’s not Christmas I see. I see me sitting at my desk and co-workers coming in to chat, late night talks in the parking lot, coming in early and staying late (I miss that why?), the lunch bus, watching the kids (and adults) grow up, and knowing I had a place to go if the world turned cold.

We had a party this weekend with some co-workers. They were here and gone in a few hours. Where was the “sit and solve the world’s problems” conversations in the wee hours of the morning? They came and went en masse. I so looked forward to the weekend, preparing and making sure everything was perfect, but I felt the entire evening that something was missing. I know now that it was the familiarity I missed. I wanted my old friends. I wanted to have the comfort of knowing that I could be me, and that it would be okay, even preferred. I wrote once many years ago that good friends reminded me of my favorite sweatshirt: It warms me up, makes me feel happier, and well, COMFORTABLE. Like someone I love had her arms wrapped around me. I want that here. (Not the sweatshirt, I still have that. I wore it yesterday.) You can get a NEW sweatshirt, but it takes a long time to wear in, it just doesn’t fit right, and you find yourself going back to the old ones. I miss my “old sweatshirt” friends. We were a good team, we worked hard and played hard, the way it SHOULD be. Perhaps I’m old fashioned. Perhaps I’m not as good at connecting with people as I used to be, who knows. I just miss the warm fuzzy feeling that we had. We just used to all be so connected.

For example, two of the kids we worked with lost their father. It was during the busiest weekend of the year for us. We didn’t really know the dad, at least I didn’t, but funerals and wakes are not for the dead, they’re for those who are left. We buckled down and showed up in force for the kids. I would like to think that it mattered to the family that we were there. It certainly mattered to us. It was the right thing to do. When we were leaving the funeral home one of the guys said, “I hurt for them”. That’s what good friends do best. They feel for each other.

One of my oldest and dearest friends lost her father recently. I got the news while I was at a wedding out of state. I was calm and collected on the phone (We always had a rule that only one of us was allowed to cry at a time.) After the conversation was over, I sat on the plush Westin bed and sobbed. I hurt, not for me, but I hurt for her. She is an “old sweatshirt” friend.

Of course not all empathetic feelings are sad. Another friend is in a new relationship, and is blooming with all the happiness and giddiness that a new loves brings. We feel that happiness for her, too. If people could spontaneously combust from elation, she would be nothing but a pile of Canadian ashes by now. Somehow, we all feel a little happier just by being her friend.

Somewhere in Indiana, or maybe in Denver, I mawkishly hope there are a few people who in the middle of the day, just when they least expect it, perhaps when they see a pumpkin, or hear a Brian Joseph song, or wax poetically about Aengus Finnan, or ride in a golf cart in the rain, or play softball, or see a bullhorn (or a moron), or read an Emily Dickinson poem, or hear a mention of Halloween, or reach for an ice pack, or hear someone calling a dog named Barney or put on a special sweatshirt, that just for a few seconds they think of me. I know there are a lot of people who cross my mind often, just when I least expect it.

2 Comments:

At 11:29 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I am crying like a toddler reading this.

The only word I have for the old sweatshirt we all used to wear is MAGIC.
There was something in the combination of our collective madness that created an almost unreal (but very real) bond. I despise that the sweatshirt wearers are so far apart, some by distance, some by schedule, some by life. I am still angry and probably always will be that “circumstances” have caused holes in the sweatshirt. I miss the lunches, office counseling sessions, moron duets, golf cart rides, and feeling like no matter what happens to any of us, that everything would be alright. I think the worse part is that I do not believe that I will ever come close to finding a sweatshirt that fits so well again.

I miss you friend. I miss you all.

 
At 11:09 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I was just thinking the other day that I came into this particular sweatshirt at just the right time to sense the amazing uniqueness that it had. Then it was gone. I got a wee taste of something and it was very good. With all the talk of "team building" and "team goals" and "team this and that" it struck me that we already HAD a team then. It was a damn fine one, too. It was unofficial and glorious. The Cool Kids!

Can't wait to see y'all. And I LOVE the idea of a reunion party in the summer. Maybe someone will bring a bullhorn... but no ice packs please! Perhaps some impromptu fasola?

love and hugs,
Keith

 

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